Pokemon Go: Best Field Research for January 2019

Field Research has breathed new life into Poké Stops... and Pokémon Go. You spin, you get new research, you complete it, you get a reward. You can have up to three Field Research tasks active at a time, and rewards can include items from potions to rare candy and silver pinap, to encounters with Pokémon from Chansey to Larvitar, to whatever the latest Shiny is.

If you complete at least one Field Research task a day for seven days, you get a breakthrough reward, which can be a rare Pokémon with a rare movest, like Body Slam Snorlax or, more frequently, a Legendary Pokémon.

What are the February 2019 Field Research Rewards worth caring about?

These are the quests that will get you new or limited-time Pokémon, like Spinda 5, or help you complete your Meltan quest:

5 Great Cuverball Throws in a row: Spinda 5

Transfer 10 Pokémon: Misdreavus (can by Shiny)

Make 3 excellent curveballs in a row: Larvitar

Make 3 great throws: Gastly, Anorith, Lileep

Catch 10 Pokémon: Magikarp or Houndour (can be Shiny)

Catch a Dragon-type Pokémon: Dratini

Catch 10 ice-type Pokémon: Kabuto

Catch 10 ground-type Pokémon: Sandshrew

Catch 5 fighting-type Pokémon: Magnemite

Catch 10 Pokémon: Magikarp, Houndour

Battle in a Gym was 5 times: Machop

Win 5 Gym Battles: Laprass

Win a Level 3 Raid or Higher: Omanyte

Hatch 5 eggs: Chansey or Rare Candy

Evolve a Pokémon: Eevee

Evolve a Pokemon using an evolution item: Aerodactyl

There's also a quest to get 5 Silver Pinap berries:

Spin 10 Stops/Gyms

The rest of the tasks, as you might imagine, are for more common Pokémon or items.

What is Field Research in Pokémon Go?

Field Research is an in-game task or quest that you can complete in order to get a reward. The reward can be items, like potions or berries, or even an encounter with a Pokémon.

Here's how Pokémon Go describes them:

There are two different types of research you can contribute to: Field Research and Special Research. Gather Field Research tasks by spinning nearby PokéStops, which will give you objectives that include discovering and catching certain Pokémon or engaging with battles, among other things. Special Research may be requested by Professor Willow himself, and will take you on a journey to make important discoveries!

Both types of research offer great rewards, including a variety of useful items and even encounters with certain Pokémon! You can complete as many research tasks as you want every day, leading to a full day of adventures. These tasks also have different levels of difficulty, so the more challenging a research task is, the greater the reward waiting for you.

You can earn one Stamp per day by completing at least one Field Research task, and when you obtain seven stamps, you can achieve a Research Breakthrough to receive even greater rewards! You may even have an encounter with a Legendary Pokémon!

Research tasks will provide interesting challenges that will help you get better at discovering, battling, and catching Pokémon! We're excited to see your contributions to the exciting field of Pokémon research, and we can't wait to hear about the adventures you have along the way! Let's get moving!

How do you get Field Research in Pokémon Go?

Simple: Walk up to a Poké Stop and spin it. As long as at least one of your three Field Research slots are open, and you have room in your item storage, you'll get a new Field Research.

Are the odds of getting a Shiny Pokémon any higher with Field Research?

Most of the time, it doesn't seem so. The same 1/450 odds at play for wild encounters seem to be the same 1/450 odds for Field Research encounters.

The only notable exception, so far, has been Aerodactyl during Adventure Week, which is theorized to have been around 1/20, which is similar to Community Day odds.

Are Field Research encounters better than average?

Field Research encounters have the same stats as egg hatches, which means a base of 10/10/10 or 66% IV. The big difference is that eggs hatch level 20 Pokémon while Field Research Pokémon only spawn at level 15.

Any Field Research questions?

If you have any questions about Field Research or Pokémon Go, drop them in the comments!